Newspapers / The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, … / Oct. 24, 1888, edition 1 / Page 2
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G9LDSB0R0 BUSfflESS CARDS. Dr. JAMES II. POWELL'S Drug Store is "Law Building," Corner store, north end, keeps con stantly in stock Fresh Drugs, Patent Medicines, &c. Prices as low as at any drug store in the .ity. Also offers his professional services to the surrounding community, at day or night. . MOORE & LINDSEY, INSURANCE. REPRESENT Continental, Fire, assets, $5,239,981 Norwich Union, Fire, assets, 1,315,486 Hamburg-Bremen, Fire, assets, 1,129,604 St. Paul, Fire, assets, 1,541,001 Southern, Fire, assets, 439,684 State agents for the Fidelity Mutual life Association, of Philadelphia. JL W. NIXO.. - - SWIFT GALLOWAY. ( IIIXOII & GALLOWAY, Attorneys at law, Goldsboro, N. C. Office: Koom No. 2, Law Building, j ixp stairs. POUTER & GODWIN, Contractors and Builderb. Plans and estimates furnished on ap plication. Emperor William is Dead! KORB STILL HANGS t Wall Paper for Everybody. f7Tu-l satisfaction guaranteed. F. J. IIAGE, Sr., jViiTif-Tic Wall Paper Hanger and House Decorator. R. A. WATTS, Dealer in Fine Jewelry, Watches, Etc. Repairing promptly done by experi enced workmen. f-lT'Ohl Gold and Silver bought or exchanged for new goods. J. Y. Joyner, N. J. RorsE, Goldsboro. Kinston. ROUSE & JOYNER, Attorneys - at - Law. Will practice where services required. Claims collected in any part of the U. S. Dr. THOMAS HILL Offers his professional services to the citizens of Goldsboro and surrounding country. JpOfEce over Pipkin's store. Slate at John II. Hill's drug store. F. J. IIAGE, Sr., Sign and Ornamental Painter. ("Correspondence Solicited. JOHN SLAUGHTER, Jr., Docs all kinds of Tin, Slate and Iron Roofing. JJSPMy aim is to please. W. B. PATE Has replenished his stock of Fine Wines and Liquors, and invites you to call at his "Palace Saloon. " E. W. COX, Real Estate Agent. Office the second door from the corner of John and Walnut streets. Collections of House Rente a specialty. DErOT OF ROBERT PORTNER BREWING COM PANY, F. W. Hilker, Agent, Goldsboro, N. C. "Correspondence solicited. HAYWOOD FREEMAN, City Hack Driver. Meets all trains, day or night. Pas sengers transported in any portion of the city. Orders left at Mr. J. R, Grif fin's store will receive prompt attention. NOTICE- The undersigned having purchased a large lot of Timber near this city are prepared to fill all ordeis for lum ber on Short Xotke and at Reasonable Prices. CT" See our prices before purchasing. Orders left with I. S. P. Sauls, W II. Griffin, at this office, or at Post, office, will receive prompt attention. Respectfully, W, E. LEWIS & COMPANY. Goldsboro, N. C. BY ACCLAUATiDfU! Mrs. E. W. Moore's UILLIHERY STORE, Heretofore has been voted H eadquarter s for the LATEST STYLES! The fall 01888 finds her with ' a lar ger stock titan ever of DAIS AXD BO.WETS, INFANT SACQUES, HOODS, TAM O'SIIANTERS, SHIRTS &C. For Lalies , Misses and Children A full line of Tips in all shades. Pompons, Fancy Feathers, Sec. The most splerulid line of HI33BONS, ever shipped to GoldsWro. With an intent to please the whole peo ple, and thereby retain the former verdict, the prices will be m accordance with the present stringence of the money market ; and quality taken into consideration will be equal if not below any racket prices. In fact she will not be undersold by any firm in town. WU1) many thanks for former kindnesses I am, Respectfully, Mi s. E. W. Moore. East Center St. PATRONIZE HOME LABOR! I have, after considerable study and experimenting, succeeded in perfect ing a gentlemen's shoe that unhesitat ingly must be pronounced the nearest a perfect shoe ever made. GUARANTEE every pair against ripping, against cracking or breaking, and the uppers will not wet through, as ordinary leath er so often does. Now, if j'ou want to spend your money for an article that will be of more benefit to yourself and at tne same time help honest rubor at home, you can do nothing better than to cive me your order for a pair of my "Hand Made Shoes." Repairing neatly and promptly done. Respectfully, T. P. Bright, Over W. II. Griffin's store. Testimonial: I have known 3Ir. T. P. Bright for several years, having had same em ployed in my shoe establishment. In regard to his work I must say that it is the best among the best, and here with I cheerfully recommend him to the public at large. I. S. D. SAULS. Mozart Saloon. East Center Street. I have now in stock the best grades of IMPORTED WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS. Have also secured the exclusive con trol of Beadleston and Woerz Celebra ted Imperial and Culmbacher Beers? The best now in use. BILLIARD PARLOR CONNEC TED WITH SALOON. The Best Mixed Drinks in the City are served here. Proprietor. D. CREECH. A full supply of FAMILY GROCERIES Always kept on hand. Sugar, Coffee, Molasses, Butter, Lard, Tobacco, Cigars, Snuff, etc. Candies, Cakes, Crackers To be sold Low for cash or country Pro duce. At the old stand Corner cf Sioeunil Mrett. FARM AND HOUSEHOLD. Roup in Fowls. Under the guise of roup are various forms of disease arising from the same cause. The symptoms are generally;, they lose ambition, and in the last stages throw their heads forward and make a shrill cough. Treatment: Remove the fowl from connection with other fowls; as it 13 very contagious. Wet the top of the head with spirits of camphor and put a little under the wing and between the legs; do not put too much in the latter places, as it may blister. Soak two or three small crackers in hot water or milk and add cayenne (red) pepper the size of a very small pea, and about one-half teaspoonful brandy. If the fowl does not eat the preparation force it down; keep all other feed from the fowl and give this mixture two or three times a, day until better, and feed very lightly for a few days. Country Gentleman, To Make Hens "Lay. Put two or more quarts of water in a kettle, and one large seed pepper or two small ones, then put the kettle over the fire. When the wa'cr boils stir in the coarse Indian meal until you have ' thick mush. Let it cook an hour or so; feed hot. Horseradish is chopped fine and stirred into musb, as prepared in the above directions, and for results we are getting from five to ten eggs per day; whereas, previous to feeding, we had not had egg3 for a long time. We hear a good deal of complaint from other people about not getting eggs. To such we would warmly recommend cooked feed fed hot. Boiled apple skins sea soned with red pepper, or boiled pota toes seasoned with horseradish are good for feed; much better than uncooked food. Corn, when fed to the hen by itself, has a tendency to fatten rather than produce the more profitable egg layim?. A spoonful of sulphur stirred with their leed occasionally will rid them of vermin and tone ud their sys tem. Picayune. Wash ins Dairy Utensils. Some wash pans, pails and vats care fully with cold water, in which is a little salt or soda; then rinse, and then thoroughly scald with hot water. Others pour on boiling water first ; sometimes rinse with cold water, more often with hot. Then there are others who are not very particular about any method. The first plan is far superior. The idea is to get all the milk off, and out of the pails, etc., before scalding. Boiling water seems to cook milk, cream and buttermilk onto and into the utensils, and there, like any other milk substance, there is a change soon that imparts its bad influence to the succeeding menses of milk. As between all hot and all cold water to wash dairy fixtures, take the latter with a little salt, and far better res ilts would follow. The wooden churn had better stand with good brine in it than be washed as many peo ple do by "boiling"' all the butter adher ing to the inside of churn into the wood, instead of first scouring it off with a little water and salt, and then proceed ing to wash. Stone churns, unless hav ing a perfect glazing, soon pet the stone walls filled with oil through the pores of the imperfect glazing, and if cream stands in this churn any length of time it absorbs some of this old cream, and the butter, however well made, will soon deteriorate in quality. The Sto:k man. Farm and Garden Notes. Let cows and calves have access to plenty of pure water and salt. Use only perfectly seasoned grape baskets ; green baskets cause mold. The peach-borer has been vanquished in the peach belt of Michigan by dig g'ng out the borer in late September and early May. Prominent fruit growers find that thinned peaches are of a superior size and excellence and sell much better than the unthinned ones. Never wa't for rain when you have a crop uncle" cultivation; keep right on cultivating and you will be surprised to find how your crop will withstand the drouth. Cultivate to keep the weeds from using the plant food needed for the crop of grain; cultivate that the air may pene trate the soil, thereby carrying the gases among the roots and developing more plant food. The New York Experiment Station discovered, a few years a$o. that seed corn nearest the tip produced the strong est and best plants ; that from the butt, next best, and that from the middle of the ear the poorest. Ensilage, and especially good corn en silage, when compared with dry corn fodder, or with other feeding stuffs, produces results so rati factory as to surprise the chemist, and which chem istry cannot explain. The warmer the milk when set, the more complete will be the separation of the cream from the milk at any g?ven lower temperature ; and the more rapidly the temperature falls, the more rapid will be the separation of the cream from the milk. If one has a bearing apple orchard now is the time to turn the old sow and pigs in to pick up the windfalls. They de stroy thousands of wcrnii that would nthTwiae trn into the eround to again i, i j;(r.ni fnrm to nropa- . COUiC 1UI 1U 1U VHiifci-.." gate the species. Household Hints. Substitute for Washing Soda: Use 1 Tivnosnlnhite of soda in place of washing I "j i 1 , , J r 1 soda. It is said this does not attack fabric, but bleaches the goods. Rnmthinnr to I7cmember: Spots in cloth or calico caused by an acid, may be removed by hartshorn. Spots caused by an alkali may be removed with vine gar or tartaric ccid. To Take Out Mildew : Wet the cloth, hnd rub on soap and pulverized chalk :ni.ed together; lay in the sun. Or it tr.:iy be remove 1 by laying the cloth in i-.ittermilk for a short time, after which ;.lace in tha hot sun. For Washing l ed Table Linen : Use xsr.d water, with a litt'e of Smith's .nude red borax, which sets the color; vHih the linen separately and quickly, using but little soap. Itinse in tepid -.vjite.-, containing a little boiled starch: iangto dry in the shade, aud iron when i,'r,,st dry. To Take Grease Out of Silks, Woolens, Paper, Floors, Etc : Put thickly over the grease spot powdered French chalk, or common chalk if you cannot get the French; cover with a brown paper, and 6et on that a flat-iron. Let it remain until ccoL Repeat if necesiary. Be sure the iron is not so hot as to burn cloth or paper. To Clean Silk and Thread Gloves: Place them on the hands, and wash with borax water or white castile suds, same as if washing the hands. Rinse under a stream of clear water, and dry with a towel, keeping the gloves on until half dried. Then remove carefully, fold so j they will look as nearly as they were as it is possible, and lay between clean towels under a weight. Under Fall Sail. Bazar. Venetian Lacemaking. Lacemaking by hand as well as by ma chinery is an industry to which a good deal of attention is being paid abroad, as Nottingham manufacturers know to their cost. Our present reference, how ever, is to hand-made lace only. The Venetian lace at the Italian Exhibition is greatly admired, and some care is ex ercised in the product'oa of it. Venice has now a school of lacemaking, and a permanent exhibition of old and new lace is now united with it. The Queen of Italy is one of the patrons, and the Italian Government gives it an annual sudsidy. Maltese and Irish point are made at Nazareth, in the Tinnevelly district, South India, and can be ob tained at a price far below English lace. It is suggested that the Indian Govern ment might render special assistance to lacemaking, and so provide domestic employment for Hindoo women. No one who has seen the Irish lace at the exhibition, moreover, can doubt that there is a newer and better future for it, if the necessary step3 are but taken to promote art training and to extend lace making as a cottage industry. Pall Mall Gazette. Subterranean Fishes. Ia the Algerian Sahara there are nu merous subterranean lakes in which n number of small fish and mollusks liv and multiply. Moreover, the artesian wells of the Sahara often throw out fisl two inches in length. The Governor o the oases of Thebes and Grabes, ii Egypt, in asserted that he ioo from an artesian well, 440 feet deep, fish in sufficient quantity u supply hi table. A new saddle that had been invented was thought worthy of introduction into the German army. As a final trial a squadron of fifty cavalrymen are now taking a four weeks' ride through Frus eia under the personal command of a General They ride forty-five miles a day. .The home crop of rice being short last year, large quantities of the East In dian article have been imported. The finest in the world is said to be trrown MmM v . ' in Java from Carolina seed. F1U)IHTLIK & KERN THE LFADING Bry goods & GOLDSBORO, IT. O. IN ECONOMY THERE IS WEALTH. In the Judicious Expenditure of Honey there is Economy. In buying your Coodsof us you will find that you are expending your money JUDICIOUSLY. HAVE YOU VISITED OUR. Clotftiit and Gent's Furnishing :DepartmBats, Which comprise the very latest and most unique styles e? before brought to this city. Our Dress Goods Department s Pronounced the Most Extensive in this Section THEY ARE NICE, NEW AND NEAT. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY IN Ladies, Gents' and Children's HAND-MADE SHOES, Which for make, quality and style cannot be surpassed by any of my Compctitoa The Remainder of our Stock, consisting of HATS, and CAPS, TRUNKS and VALISES, and a varied Assortment of NOTIONS, SHAWLS, BLANKETS is Complete in every Detail, and will be sold LOWER THAN THE LOWEST. mb, whips in nnmnn In Plush, Astrican and JBeaver, TO SUIT THE MOST FASTIDIOUS. CARPETS, RUGS. AND OIL CLOTHS. Ia iMs Department We Defy Competition. We can show you Carpets from 1 5 Cents up to S1.50 per Yard. FURHITURE! FURfflTURE! FURNITURE1 We are still headquarters in the above line, aa have on hMd the U,s ixipply ever carried. Remember t I i,cmucr or the Goldsboro Steam Furniture Factory. VVUiCli Enables TJ to Sell Yon Furniture- AT NORTHERN HANUFACTURERS PRICES- FUCHTLER & KERN. (Stalling House. - at . -vr - 6 We Continue enrr .r.SVlt v ouuu
The Goldsboro Headlight (Goldsboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 24, 1888, edition 1
2
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